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Constructor 7007
Приєднався 7 лип 2017
Construction techniques for medium sized projects, ground up process of building a 9,000 square foot hotel, restaurant, and bar.
LOGIX ICF basement construction start to finish
LOGIX ICF basement construction @ Eagleville Saloon, Hotel_Restaurant_Bar
Переглядів: 2 082 651
Great content. Thanks for the video!
No wishful thinking. It will eventually fail if not done right. Concreting is the most unattractive and unglamorous work but is the most important part of the final structural integrity of a building.
holly cow how big are those footers, it looks like 3 feet wide and 2 feet deep. obviously its perspective but im still very curious
They are exactly that. The actual engineering was for 18" deep but we are on top of an ancient river bed and we had to go deeper to get to stable material.
Seems like a lot of work. In the end, you end up with a concrete wall, just like if you built it out of CMU’s. A lot of money wasted.
thanks for the share guys : )
Cool vid. But not very informative for a noob.
I was expecting more videos??? Only one video..
Just curious. Why would you waterproof the walls before pouring concrete? Wouldn’t there be movement to make that membrane fail??
No roof over the basement?
Good music!... 🎵🎶🔈🔉🔊
I kept watching for the Music!!! 😏😑😏
👍👍👍
It looks like too much work for me but great video
How many years will this last?
Will this survive an earthquake?
Absolutely!
Guys what are those white things called?
Logix Blocks, insulated concrete forms
Love the music. It’s here btw m.ua-cam.com/video/17hp6tUbI4I/v-deo.html
I would like to know why you have to put the 2x4 from the 4 corners straight to the middle. for what reason I would like to understand so I will follow and do it my country Laos. Please reply me. I really want to learn from you. please n please
Construction is a great. Art 👍
Nice work! Superior materials and craftsmanship compared to most that I see. Thanks for sharing!
This is insane how much unnecessary concrete and reinforcement is used here! This is not normal.
It is normal for the earthquake zone we are in, which is level 4 out of 5. California is supersized on reinforcement. I rocked through the 94 earthquake in Los Angeles, and as a GC saw the destruction that followed; it was unbelievable and made me a believer of engineering. For the size of the investment I’ve made in this building a little more concrete and rebar is not a big deal.
Where I live, this is code. Anything less would literally be negligent.
Definitely saving this, so when I move to MO I can make one.tha k you very much for educated video
There should be full series of construction next to it as well
what is that white boards?
Nice video. But, no windows or doors (cutout for bulkhead stairway)?
The basement is completely underground with a two story building on top of it that extends out in both directions, no place to put windows or a door. I thought was interesting that the building department passed it that way, too.
@@Constructor-ly8in Thanks for the reply - After posting, I looked at all the comments and figured out the reasons. Great work. And I have to remember that you are in CA, so you don’t need a 2000 lb boiler system in the basement to eventually have to replace... In New England, the HVAC crew would bring a backhoe and concrete saw along with their install instructions to a job like that. Haha!
ua-cam.com/video/ngjqyMT94Uw/v-deo.html
I'm really shock about less metall rebar and so much the thickness concrete 2) the gravel base was not rammed
The gravel base is only 3” thick, you don’t ram a 3” gravel base under a slab. Footings and rebar per engineered plans, so built to specs.
Good to see a basement in California...every home needs a basement even in warmer climates
warmer climates is where you'd want a basement most right?
@@blixxy1320 absolutely ! Nice and cool below ground.
What are these 3-4 wooden gaps for? on top of the walls. 14:35
السلام عليكم نصيحة من أخ صغير الي من يرى تعليقي لاتترك صلاتك فهناك الملايين في القبور يتمنون لو تعود بهم الحياه ليسجدو لا تنسو زيارة قناتي وتشتركو فيها.
Unless it has something to do with the seismic requirements, the horizontal rebar is on the wrong side of the wall. The rebar should be located on the tension side of the wall, not the compressive side.
Please send complite proper video....youtube...or my no 9917665059
Where you guys based out of?
Los Angeles
@@Constructor-ly8in awesome shoot me your number I’m in Los Angeles as well. Or just tell me what to google to find your number
This foundation will survive a nuclear bomb.
Is it earthquake proof I couldn't see COLUMN (Pillars)
It is engineered to Los Angeles earthquake codes, it is mostly underground so columns are not necessary
@@Constructor-ly8in Thanks 4 your reply.
Why did you guys not place a waterproof layer under the foundation? To prevent moisture from coming up from the ground? Just wondering
Area is built for a nuclear blast . !!!!! Solid
ua-cam.com/video/4lbI-cBhkm8/v-deo.html
Amazing continuous video capturing. Days of work in few minutes. Wow , we can clearly see the sun is rising and setting. Also nice basement building.
thatas about how long it takes............
Wow, I love this video, really learned a lot from it! Please pardon my ignorance, but what is the hole in the middle of the floor for? Also, once the basement foundation and walls are completed (as shown in the video), what happens if it takes a while before you go to the next phase of construction and it rains a lot in the meantime? What is the industry norm to prevent the newly built basement from flooding during heavy rainfall, do you put a tarp over the entire roof or something? Thanks in advance.
Anthony Ortiz the yellow sheet in the video is a 15 mil moisture barrier (Stegowrap)
@@Constructor-ly8in He's talking about the dug out hole before pouring concrete in the middle. I'm assuming you have a post or lolly column going there and needed the footing for it?
@@onjofilms Yes, center post for 8x14 PSL beam
"I recommend this guide: *sogy.best/ecb-guide/Iei* So grateful it exists." 4:43 Η τέλεια μέθοδος για όλους
God I hate spammers
I wish there was some instructions , the pibes under the slab and the hoel in the middle, someone please educate me? french drains,samp?
Dappermonkie 2 of the pipes under the slab attach to exterior perimeter perforated foundation drain pipes that collect water outside the walls and carry it to the sump well in the middle. There is a sump pump that ejects the water to grade outside the building. Other interior pipes under the slab are for hot water heaters, plumbing system drains
@@Constructor-ly8in thank you or replying!
Good work 👍 Here visit us ua-cam.com/video/1dgIjAbHYvA/v-deo.html
Would there be any benifit to using fiberglass in the concrete in the walls in addition to the rebar?
Infinite Adam, no, that would weaken the design of the concrete mix.
@@Constructor-ly8in do you know where I can learn more about this? I am surprised it wouldn't add strength but I would like to understand more about why it would have the adverse effect.
Infinite Adam the concrete is a 3000 PSI mix, and the rebar design was done by my engineer to the seismic zone we are in, which is the same as Los Angeles (hence the large footings), so adding fiberglass to the mix as a strengthening agent isn’t necessary. I’m not sure where you would go for more info.
That was one pretty long day
первый раз вижу, что-бы так нагло деньги заказчика в землю закапывали.
Hi, great work. A question: How material is made a withe walls? Thx.
Francisco Javier Salazar Marin they are styrofoam blocks.
No means of emergency egress from the basement ??? Yikes...
I’m here because my house is currently being built with a basement by Ryan homes.. just wanted to see what the process was! This is COOL..
only issue I see is the rebar should be towards the inside of the form. All the pressure to crack will be there.